Notes and Editorial Reviews

Leonard Bernstein was always a very impressive Beethoven conductor. When this set was first released, it was received somewhat tepidly, largely on account of Bernstein’s “espressivo” style in the Fifth, and also the occasional roughness in the playing of the New York Philharmonic. The comparison, naturally, was to the extremely smooth and polished Berlin Philharmonic under Karajan, whose 1963 cycle was viewed as the acme of great orchestral playing–which, of its kind, it was. Then Bernstein re-recorded all of these works with the Vienna Philharmonic for DG, and that was that as far as these performances were concerned. Heard from today’s perspective, after decades of “authentic” performances of a timbral crudeness that are to Bernstein whatRead more Bernstein was to Karajan, perhaps it’s time for a reappraisal.

In the first place, Bernstein isn’t all bluster and excess. The first two symphonies have plenty of stylish playing and conducting supporting their energetic cast. Those crucial bass lines in the finale of the Fifth speak more powerfully here than they do in Vienna, and the special affinity that Bernstein has always felt for the Eroica and Seventh Symphonies are very much in evidence. Granted, the Ninth has to make due with an average cast of soloists (Martina Arroyo aside), and the Juilliard Chorus is good but not great, but then this is true of so many versions of this symphony; certainly Bernstein’s interpretation has plenty of fire and a genuinely hushed intensity in the Adagio. The Pastoral too has lots of rustic character, with the last three movements particularly well paced.

The overtures are marvelous: Leonore No. 3 and The Consecration of the House are especially outstanding. As for the Violin Concerto, Isaac Stern’s recordings have much the same reputation as Bernstein’s first Beethoven cycle: good, but somehow in the second tier. Is this deserved? I’m not so sure. This is a beautiful performance, serene but not lacking energy in the first movement, expressively flowing in Larghetto, and full of physical energy in the finale. Soloist and accompanist work very well together; nothing sounds routine or taken for granted.

Sonically these recordings have held up well; they never were great, but they capture the performances with a certain unvarnished directness that seems to suit the interpretations, and they have been well remastered. At budget price, you can try this set and decide for yourself if it deserves a higher reputation than that granted by received opinion over the years.

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Review: ( 5 Customer Reviews )

Beethoven: Symphonies No 1-9, Bernstein ConductingJanuary 17, 2017By Robert F. (San Pedro, CA)See All My Reviews"One of the best symphonic purchases I have made. These six CD's for under $10 is a remarkable purchase. I have enjoyed their superb sound and classical reproduction and quality; Beethoven would have agreed. I would have paid a higher price for them, but that is not for ArkivMusic to know. This is a great edition to my classical music library."Report Abuse

old line qualityJanuary 8, 2016By Dwight o. See All My Reviews"Some of old recordings by Joseph Kripps do not have the sharpness that Bernstein puts into this recording set."Report Abuse

BernsteinJune 2, 2015By Eugene P. (San Francisco, CA)See All My Reviews"Bernstein's Beethoven has been criticized as being romantic. If so its not a problem here, but rather a welcome antidote to metronomic period Beethoven. These are generally exciting and well played with excellent sound. Better sound than the original LPs. Only the first movement of the 9th came off poorly, too slow and limp; the slow movement is beautiful though."Report Abuse